Toronto, Ontario – August 19, 2008 – KWG Resources Inc. (TSX Venture: KWG) (“KWG”), Spider Resources Inc. (TSX Venture: SPQ) (“Spider”) and Freewest Resources Canada Inc. (TSX Venture: FWR) (“Freewest”) announce today that the current drill program financed by the Spider-KWG Joint Venture on the Freewest Option has thus far completed 4 additional diamond drill-holes in the current program. The drilling program on the Freewest option property is located approximately 3.6 kilometres northeast of Noront Resources Ltd.’s (“Noront”) Eagle One Magmatic Massive Sulphide (Nickel Copper and PGM) and 5 kilometres NE of Noront’s Blackbird One and Two (Chromite) discoveries. Although assay results for these recent drill-holes are pending, the Company is pleased to advise that the previously postulated thickening of the Chromite layers has been confirmed.

Highlights

Recently completed drilling indicates a thickening of chromite beds of up to 45.6 metres.

Further drilling is required with the goal of completing a NI 43-101 compliant mineral resource for chromite on the property.

Previously announced (11 June ’08, dated 2 May ’08, 29 June ’06) the drilling results from the massive chromite layers discovered in a peridotite sill encountered in drill-holes FW-06-03(34.5% Cr2O3/1.03 meters), hole FW-08-05 (35.6% Cr2O3/7.5 metres), hole FW-08-06 (multiple intercepts like 7.15% Cr2O3/7.5 metres and 9.73% Cr2O3/6.9 metres) and hole FW-08-07 (30.73% Cr2O3/14.4 metres). In addition to the Chrome elevated Platinum, Palladium and Gold have been detected (2.183 g/t (Pt + Pd + Au) over 9.0 metres). Due to the early stage of exploration, true width of the Chromite intersections are unknown.

The current program has demonstrated that the massive chromite beds or lenses intersected in these earlier drill-holes are increasing in their apparent thickness with successive step-out holes to the North East (down the apparent dip of the Peridotite Sill complex) as summarized in the following summary table:

Hole ID

Inclination

From
(m)

To
(m)

Interval
(m)

Brief Description

FW-08-12

-50 deg

208.3

210.1

1.8

Semi Massive to Massive Chromite

228.25

237.9

9.6

Semi Massive to Massive Chromite

237.9

240.6

2.7

Massive Chromite

240.6

248.5

8.3

Minor Chromite

29.6 m

Interval thickness

252.25

260.7

8.4

Massive Chromite (lower fault contact)

FW-08-13

-50 deg

78.4

82.3

3.9

Massive Chromite

82.3

85.2

2.9

Semi Massive Chromite

90.25

102

11.75

Massive Chromite

19.5

Interval thickness

102

109.8

7.8

Semi Massive Chromite

109.8

111

1.2

Massive Chromite

111

117

6.0

Semi Massive Chromite

117

142.1

25.1

Massive Chromite

39.1

Interval thickness

FW-08-14

-50 deg

36.2

81.8

45.6

Massive Chromite

82.3

103.5

21.2

Semi Massive Chromite

67.8

Interval thickness

FW-08-15

-50 deg

160

164.1

4.1

Fault Zone – With Massive Chromite present as Fragments in the Fault Zone

164.1

171.3

7.2

Massive Chromite

11.3

Interval thickness

The intersections contained in the above table include comments on visual descriptions of mineralized intercepts, there are no guarantees that assay results will support or confirm these visual results, assays are pending. While the true width of the many Chromite beds remains unknown, primarily due to the fact that the chromium enriched bodies’ limits are undefined as to depth, length or attitude, the Chromite beds appear to be present in distinct cycles consisting of couplets’ of semi massive (thin centimetre thick bands of Chromite sandwiched between barren sections of the peridotite host rock with or without sections of containing only disseminated Chromite) of varying thickness. This graded’ sequence transitions to or grades downwards into the massive Chromite (+metre thick) beds. The lower massive Chromite beds in several holes were terminated by faults that may have displaced part of the massive bed or lenses and the semi-massive couplet. This faulting may have also caused some stacking’ or repetition of the Chromite bed sequence.

Drill-hole FW-08-13 intersected 2 distinctly massive beds or zones of numerous thin beds of Chromite separated by bands of the host rock. This Drill-hole is a 50 metre step out to the south (grid) from Drill-hole FW-08-07.

Drill-hole FW-08-14 intersected 1 distinctly massive bed or zone of numerous thin beds of Chromite separated by bands of the host rock. This Drill-hole is a 50 metre step out to the North (grid north) form Drill-hole FW-08-07.

Drill-hole FW-08-15 has been collared 50 metres grid north of Drill-hole FW-08-07 to undercut FW-08-14 and parallel FW-08-12. Only one massive Chromite bed was encountered in this Drill-hole and its top and the thinly bedded Semi-massive’ appears to have been displaced by a fault.

Drilling to date has demonstrated that the massive Chromite beds cover an area of 150 metres by 200 metres and this occurrence is open on strike to the northeast, southwest, and down dip.

The Joint venture partners are encouraged by the apparent thickening of the massive Chromite beds to the northeast, with the potential for grade and tonnage development in addition to the significant presence of Gold and Platinum (FW-08-07 2.183g/t (Pt+Pd+Au) over 9.0 metres). The partners are now considering additional drilling as required for resource definition drilling.

Internal research by management of the joint venture, on chromium suggests that the Chromite occurrences encountered in the drill-holes on the Freewest Option are, from a geological perspective, similar to those encountered in the Bird River Sill located in Manitoba (reference:www.gov.mb.ca/stem/mrd/geo/field/roa01pdfs/01gs-19.pdf) or Outokumpu’s Kemi Chrome Mine in Northern Finland. At the Kemi mine, up to 11 Chromite beds or lenses are found 50 to 200 metres above the base of a Precambrian aged mafic to ultramafic sill-like intrusion (www.gl.rhbnc.ac.uk/geode/Fennoscandia/Kemi.html). These chromite lens are found over an area 4.5 kilometres long and are 5 to 105 metres wide and up to 40 metres thick (www.tunnelbuilder.com/rockreinforcement/edition2pdf/page83.pdf). The initial resource reported by Outokumpu was 150 million tons grading 28.6 % Cr2O3 and in 1999 the US Government estimated that the Kemi Deposit contained “70 million metric tons (Mt) of proven and probable reserves and additional resources of about 150 Mt (Metal Bulletin, 1999a)” (minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/country/1999/9413099.pdf). These estimates were prepared prior to the implementation of National Instrument 43-101 standards for reporting resources and reserves, but are offered to demonstrate the relative large size potential size of this style of mineralization and although the Joint Venture results to date are encouraging considerable more drilling is required.

This press release has been prepared by management of Spider Resources Inc., which is the operator of the joint venture with KWG during 2008, and has been approved for dissemination by Neil Novak P.Geo, President of Spider and a Qualified Person as such term as defined under National Instrument 43-101, who has reviewed and verified the technical information contained in this press release and has approved the contents of this press release.